Fred Itua
In Nigeria, success is rarely a private affair. The moment a man secures a stable income, passes a professional examination, or lands employment abroad, an invisible covenant is presumed to have been signed; one he was never consulted on, but is nonetheless expected to honour with his blood, his peace, and his savings.
He becomes, without ceremony, the family messiah.
The concept sounds noble on the surface. After all, what is community if not the commitment to lift one another? What is kinship if it demands nothing of us? These are honourable questions. But there is a profound difference between choosing to give from abundance and being consumed until there is nothing left to give, not to others, and certainly not to oneself.
The messiah complex does not announce itself loudly. It arrives as a cousin’s school fees here, a mother’s medical bill there, a sibling’s small business that needs just a little push. Before long, the one who made it finds himself financing lives he did not author, making sacrifices he never budgeted for, and carrying burdens that were never, in truth, designed for one pair of shoulders.
One must be honest about the terrain. Nigeria’s economic architecture has, for decades, failed the ordinary citizen with spectacular consistency; inflation that devours savings overnight, unemployment that makes education feel like a cruel joke, a healthcare system that collapses precisely when it is most needed, and a pension structure that leaves the elderly wholly dependent on their children.
In this context, family solidarity is not merely cultural sentiment, it is, for many, a survival mechanism. Yet, survival mechanisms, when left unexamined, can become their own form of crisis.
To acknowledge this is not to be cold. It is to be honest. The one who gives everything and keeps nothing for himself does not become a hero; he becomes the next person who needs rescuing.
When your rent is threatened because a relative’s debt felt more urgent than your own shelter. That is not generosity; that is disorder. When you cannot invest in your own future because the present demands of others consume every surplus. That is not sacrifice; that is slow erasure.
When you dread your phone ringing, when family gatherings fill you with anxiety rather than warmth, when you begin to resent the very people you love, the fire has already begun.
Resentment is not a character flaw. It is a wound that appears when expectations exceed reasonable human capacity, when appreciation is absent, and when one’s own needs are perpetually treated as secondary to everyone else’s.
The tragedy of the family messiah is not that he fails others. It is that, in trying to save everyone, he quietly destroys himself and still, the demands do not cease.
To protect one’s boundaries is not to abandon one’s people. Let that be stated plainly. Limit-setting is not a betrayal of culture; it is an act of wisdom, the kind that ensures you remain standing long enough to be genuinely useful.
Here is what that looks like in practice:
Decide what you can give freely, without bitterness, and give only that. Generosity coerced by guilt is not generosity, it is a transaction under duress, and it poisons both the giver and the relationship.
Separate genuine emergencies from chronic dependency. A broken bone is an emergency. A lifestyle that has never been self-sustaining, decade after decade, is a structural problem that your monthly transfers will never solve. One requires your help; the other requires an honest conversation.
Communicate with clarity and without cruelty. One can say I cannot at this time without saying I do not care. One can say here is what I am able to do without bankrupting one’s dignity in the process. Honesty, delivered with warmth, is not rejection; it is respect.
There is a grief in this conversation that must be acknowledged: some problems are too large for one person to solve. A family that has accumulated decades of financial wounds, poor planning, and systemic disadvantage cannot be made whole by any single salary, no matter how impressive, no matter how diligently earned.
To accept this is not defeat. It is clarity.
You are not a government. You are not a social welfare institution. You are one human being with finite resources, finite energy, and one irreplaceable life. To acknowledge your limitations is not weakness, it is the beginning of wisdom.
Nigeria will not suddenly become easier. The system will not, overnight, begin to provide what it has long withheld. But you can choose, beginning today, to stop being the gap-filler for every insufficiency in every life around you and to start treating your own flourishing as a matter of legitimate priority.
The strongest thing you can do for your family is to not become their next crisis. Build your life with intention. Give what you can, when you can, from a place of genuine willingness. Protect your peace as fiercely as you protect your relationships. Understand, once and for all, that love, real love, does not require you to disappear.
You were not born to be consumed. You were born to live. There is no virtue in an empty well.
